You're shooting an AfterTheEnd movie where almost everyone is gone, and the world has fallen into disrepair. You're telling the story of TheAloner or the last few people, so when you have to shoot in the city you can't have streets full of cars and people in the background. The thing is, clearing the streets of people, making sure lawns look unkempt, and other set dressing for the apocalypse can be expensive and takes a lot of time. How do you get around this but still film the characters outside?

You use a lot of shots from below the actors![[note]]It doesn't have to be from below either. Low is most common, but shots from up high pointing down are used, too - it's just easier to keep the camera low than rent a crane. [[RealityEnsues Gravity and all]].[[/note]] This way you don't have to worry about the busy street behind the actors or the neatly-mown lawns (that should have been untouched for years) on the side of the road. All the audience will see is the tops of buildings (which would probably still be in okay shape), and treetops. You remove the sounds of traffic in editing and replace it with silence. As camera tricks go, you can't get much more simple.

Of course, it can be jarring when used too much or from too low an angle, making it feel like everything is being recorded from the point of view of a child - but when used with proper planning, you barely even notice. Competent directors simply make sure the characters in the foreground or the tall objects in the background are interesting enough and the audience will be distracted.

Also a convenient way to avoid catching undesirable advertisements (such as signs promoting a rival studio's or network's fare) in the background.

Less common these days in big-budget films as a background can be replaced with CGI. For instance, when Creator/TomHanks climbs to the top of the island in ''Film/CastAway'', you can see in the DVD extras that he was in a parking lot, but this was replaced by CGI - this is not the trope because the angle was just for effect, not to obscure the parking lot, which was removed in post-production.

Different from HitlerCam, which is just to magnify a character's height, not to hide something.----!Examples:[[foldercontrol]]

[[folder: Film ]]

* ''Film/{{Godspell}}'' uses this often with its empty Manhattan, only it's non-apocalyptic.* The only actual outside shot of ''Film/TwoThousandOneASpaceOdyssey'' was the scene where the proto-human smashes the skull and bones, shot in a field on a raised platform from down low to get the sky in the shot and to avoid the cars and trucks in the background.

[[/folder]]

[[folder: Live Action TV ]]

* Television, with its long shooting schedule and many shots, uses this a lot. The following shows have many scenes of the characters walking and talking, from a low angle to hide roadsides and the fronts of houses.* ''Series/FallingSkies'': Mostly season one, in the Boston area. Later seasons spent more time on sets or in the woods.* ''Series/{{Revolution}}'': Used fairly often to save on having to close streets and dress them with trash and rubble.* ''Series/TheWalkingDead'': Often goes on roads out in the country, but still shoots from low so they don't have to dress the ground.* ''Series/BattlestarGalactica2003'': When the folks back on Caprica are going through the empty city.* ''Series/TheLastManOnEarth'': The survivors take up homes on a hilltop - this ensures the camera has less of a chance of picking up action in the background of shots.----